No, they did not. While both German and Italian immigrants had to register with the federal government as illegal immigrants, it was the Japanese Americans who had the most restrictions. Under federal law, Japanese Americans, many of them citizens of the United States, were evicted from their homes and moved to relocation camps where they were stripped of their freedoms and liberty.
the German invasion of neutral Belgium
German interests appeared to clash with U.S. interests. Germany's autocratic government did not please democratic Americans.
Both the German concentration camps and the American interment camps had a lot of stock in the fear and prejudice citizens had against the minorities. Obviously, the German government continually stated that Germans were a threat to the Aryan race, but the American media also portrayed Japanese Americans as a threat to the white race. Japanese Americans were put under a lot of the same civil rights restrictions as African Americans at the time, too...
Britain declared war on Germany following the German invasion of Poland.
it was a 'pocket battleship', because of treaty restrictions, Germany could not build battleships, so it was the size of a cruiser but with the armament of a battleship.
the German invasion of neutral Belgium
German was a monarchy which didn’t appeal to many Americans democratic ideals (apex)
Germany was a monarchy, which didn't appeal to many Americans democratic ideals
The imperial ambitions of Germany worried those with trading ties to Europe, and Germany had targeted the shipping of neutral nations such as the US.
Japanese-Americans had more restrictions that Italian and German because they were more powerful. They won the war.
During World War II, some Americans did fight on the German side but this was uncommon and typically involved individuals with strong ideological beliefs or personal reasons for supporting Germany. The vast majority of Americans fought for the Allied Powers against Germany.
The main targets of these attacks were Americans who had emigrated from other nations, those from Germany and Austria-Hungary. the most bitter attacks were directed against the nearly 2 million Americans of German descent suffered as well.
Some Americans settled in Germany after the Second World War. Many of them hold white collars jobs in German companies and are accepted in German society.
The allied forces were against the German axis
American public opinion turned against Germany in WW One & WW Two for various reasons. In WW1, Germany invaded France & Belgium in August 1914. Because, Belgium was a neutral country, Americans were upset with Germany. The invasion of Belgium however was not the most important factor. Later, German unrestricted submarine warfare also turned American public opinion against Germany. Then as a final straw, the German's Zimmermann telegram message to Mexico further angered Americans. In WW2, Germany invaded Poland, neutral Denmark, neutral Norway, neutral Holland, neutral Belgium, and so forth on & on. German submarine warfare also turned public opinion against Germany.
Clearly, the Japanese Americans were much easier to spot. But the Italian and German Americans had it just as bad in their concentration camps, largely in Montana and Texas.
German interests appeared to clash with U.S. interests. Germany's autocratic government did not please democratic Americans.